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Featured researches published by Beny Schmidt.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1993

Dengue: muscle biopsy findings in 15 patients

S. M Malheiros; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Beny Schmidt; José Geraldo Camargo Lima; Alberto Alain Gabbai

Dengue is known to produce a syndrome involving muscles, tendons and joints. The hallmark of this syndrome is severe myalgia but includes fever, cutaneous rash, and headache. The neuromuscular aspects of this infection are outlined only in isolated reports, and the muscle histopathological features during myalgia have not been described. In order to ascertain the actual neuromuscular involvement in dengue and better comprehend the histological nature of myalgia, we performed a clinical and neurological evaluation, a serum CPK level and a muscle biopsy (with histochemistry) in 15 patients (4 males), median age 23 years (range 14-47) with classic dengue fever, serologically confirmed, during the brazilian dengue epidemics from September 1986 to March 1987. All patients had a history of fever, headache and severe myalgia. Upon examination 4 had a cutaneous rash, 3 had fever, and 3 a small hepatomegaly. The neurological examination was unremarkable in all and included a manual muscle test. CPK was mildly elevated in only 3 patients. Muscle biopsy revealed a light to moderate perivascular mononuclear infiltrate in 12 patients and lipid accumulation in 11. Mild mitochondrial proliferation was seen in 3, few central nuclei in 3, rare foci of myonecrosis in 3, and 2 patients had type grouping. Dengue in our patients, produced myalgia but no detectable muscle weakness or other neuromuscular involvement. The main histopathological correlation with myalgia seems to be a perivascular mononuclear infiltrate and lipid accumulation.


Neurology | 1987

McArdle's disease in two generations: Autosomal recessive transmission with manifesting heterozygote

Beny Schmidt; S. Servidei; Alberto Alain Gabbai; Alisson Silva; S. DiMauro

A 17-year-old boy had exercise-induced cramps and myoglobinuria. The mother had myalgia and weakness after exercise but the father was asymptomatic. Muscle biopsy was normal in the father but showed glycogen storage and absent or markedly decreased histochemical stain for phosphorylase in mother and son. Autosomal dominant McArdles disease was considered likely, but biochemical studies showed that muscle phosphorylase activity was 0.6% of normal in the son, 20% in the mother, and 45% in the father, with corresponding decreases of cross-reacting material by immunotitration. These data suggest autosomal recessive transmission. One of the parents was clinically silent and the other was a manifesting heterozygote.


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 1998

Centronuclear myopathy: clinical aspects of ten Brazilian patients with childhood onset.

Edmar Zanoteli; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Beny Schmidt; Alberto Alain Gabbai

We herein present 10 patients with the childhood onset form of centronuclear myopathy. All patients underwent a clinical and neurologic examination, and EMG/NVC. A series of ancillary examinations, consisting of muscle enzymes, EEG, EKG, echocardiogram, pulmonary function tests and head CT scan was done in most. The mean age was 16.3 years (3-25). Seven were female. There was no family history in seven and in two it was suggestive of an autosomal recessive inheritance. One patient was adopted and no history was available. Frequent gestational and neonatal abnormalities were present, namely poor fetal movements, maternal polyhydramnios, perinatal hypoxia, hypotonia at birth, and weak crying and feeding. In seven patients there was delayed motor milestones. In most patients the motor involvement was stable or slowly progressive. Upon examination the facies were myopathic and there was a global skeletal muscle involvement in all patients, with muscular hypotonia, atrophy, and areflexia. Characteristically, patients presented with ophthalmoparesis, and weakness of masticatory and facial muscles. We frequently found osteoskeletal abnormalities, namely kyphoscoliosis, tendon retractions and high-arched palate. A restrictive pulmonary function pattern was found in five patients, but only one had a cor pulmonale. CK was abnormally high in one patient, and normal in all others. EMG/NVC disclosed a myopathic pattern in nine; in three there was a mixed neurogenic picture; and in one we found myotonic discharges. A long follow-up (median 8.1 years) showed that only the patient with cor pulmonale had an unfavorable prognosis.


Medical Hypotheses | 2009

Could sudden death syndrome (SDS) in chickens (Gallus gallus) be a valid animal model for sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP)

F.A. Scorza; R. S. de Albuquerque; Ricardo Mario Arida; Beny Schmidt; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Carla A. Scorza; Esper A. Cavalheiro

Epilepsy is the most common serious neurological disorder and approximately 1% of the population worldwide has epilepsy. Moreover, sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is the most important direct epilepsy-related cause of death. Information concerning risk factors for SUDEP is conflicting, but potential risk factors include: young age, early onset of epilepsy, duration of epilepsy, uncontrolled seizures, seizure frequency, AED number and winter temperatures. Additionally, the cause of SUDEP is still unknown; however, the most commonly suggested mechanisms are cardiac abnormalities during and between seizures. Similarly, sudden death syndrome (SDS) is a disease characterized by an acute death of well-nourished and seeming healthy Gallus gallus after abrupt and brief flapping of their wings and incidence of SDS these animals has recently increased worldwide. Moreover, the exactly cause of SDS in Gallus gallus is unknown, but is very probable that cardiac abnormalities play a potential role. Due the similarities between SUDEP and SDS and as Gallus gallus behavioral manifestation during SDS phenomenon is close of a tonic-clonic seizure, in this paper we suggest that epilepsy could be a new possible causal factor for SDS.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1989

Estudo histoquímico do músculo esquelético no alcoolismo crônico

Maria Lucia Cardoso Gomes Ferraz; Alberto Alain Gabbai; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; A. P. J. Ferrari; S. J. Miszputen; A. Ferreira Neto; Adauto Castelo Filho; Beny Schmidt

Twenty-two chronic alcoholic patients were assessed by neurologic examination and muscle biopsy. The patients manifested proximal muscular weakness to a variable extent. One case presented as an acute bout of myopathy, according to the Manual Muscle Test, MMT. The most prominent histologic feature observed was muscle atrophy (95.3%) better evidenced through the ATPase stain with the predominance of type II A fibers (71.4%). Lack of the mosaic pattern (type grouping) seen in 76% of the cases and an important mitochondrial proliferation with intrasarcoplasmatic lipid accumulation in 63% of the patients. In case of acute presentation of muscle weakness the pathological substrate is quite different, i.e. presence of myositis mainly interstitial characterized by lymphoplasmocytic infiltrate and several spots of necrosis like Zencker degeneration. Based on histologic criteria, our data suggest that: the main determinant of muscle weakness seen in chronic alcoholic patients is neurogenic in origin (alcoholic polyneuropathy); the direct toxic action of ethanol under the skeletal muscle is closely related to the mitochondrial metabolism; the so-called acute alcoholic myopathy has probably viral etiology.


Medicine | 2015

Histochemical analysis of paraspinal rotator muscles from patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis: a cross-sectional study.

Marcelo Wajchenberg; Délio Eulálio Martins; Rafael Paiva Luciano; Eduardo Barros Puertas; David Del Curto; Beny Schmidt; Acary Bulle de Souza Oliveira; Flávio Faloppa

Abstract Morphological, biochemical, and histopathological alterations in the paraspinal skeletal muscle of patients with adolescent idiopathic scoliosis (AIS) have been extensively reported. We evaluated rotator muscle fibers from the apex vertebra of AIS patients through histological and immunohistochemical analysis. A population of 21 female AIS patients who underwent corrective surgery between 2010 and 2013 had biopsies taken from the paraspinal muscle in the convex and concave sides of the thoracic curve apical vertebra. Serial sections were stained following routine protocols for hematoxylin and eosin (HE), Sudan red, Gomori trichrome, NADH, ATPase, and cytochrome oxidase. We assessed muscular atrophy and hypertrophy, fatty proliferation, endomysial and perimysial fibrosis, the presence of hyaline fibers, mitochondrial proliferation, muscular necrosis, nuclear centralization, and inflammation. Two independent professionals evaluated the slices. The thoracic curves had an average Cobb angle of 68 degree. Comparative analysis of the concave and convex sides was performed with McNemar test at a significance level of 5%. Results showed significant differences in both endomysial and perimysial fibrosis and fatty involution between the two sides of the apex vertebra. Paraspinal muscles in the concave side of the scoliosis apex had significantly more fibrosis and fatty involution. However, both sides showed signs of myopathy, muscular atrophy due to necrosis, presence of hyaline fibers, and mitochondrial proliferation.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1994

Paralisia periódica: estudo anátomo-patológico do músculo esquelético de 14 pacientes

Célia Harumi Tengan; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Maria da Penha Ananias Morita; Beatriz Hitomi Kiyomoto; Beny Schmidt; Alberto Alain Gabbai

Periodic paralysis is a rare disease, characterized by transient weakness associated with abnormal levels of serum potassium. Muscle biopsy may show a wide range of abnormalities, vacuoles being more specifically linked to the disease. We analysed 17 muscle biopsies from 14 patients with periodic paralysis (14 hypokalemic, 2 hyperkalemic). All of them showed at least one histological abnormality. Fourteen specimens showed vacuoles that were peripheral, single, frequent and preferentially found in type I fibers. Frequency or severity of attacks did not correlate with the presence of vacuoles but those were more easily found in patients with long term disease. Ten biopsies showed tubular aggregates, specially on the patients with frequent crises or long term disease. A second biopsy was done in three patients and in two we observed a worsening of the histopathologic picture. One patient manifested interictal weakness with evident myopathic changes on the muscle biopsy. Nonspecific changes were found in variable degrees in 15 biopsies. Our study shows that vacuoles and tubular aggregates are frequent changes in periodic paralysis and therefore helpful for the diagnosis. Important myopathic findings in the muscle biopsy suggest a permanent myopathy which probably develops after severe crises or long term disease.Periodic paralysis is a rare disease, characterized by transient weakness associated with abnormal levels of serum potassium. Muscle biopsy may show a wide range of abnormalities, vacuoles being more specifically linked to the disease. We analysed 17 muscle biopsies from 14 patients with periodic paralysis (14 hypokalemic, 2 hyperkalemic). All of them showed at least one histological abnormality. Fourteen specimens showed vacuoles that were peripheral, single, frequent and preferentially found in type I fibers. Frequency or severity of attacks did not correlate with the presence of vacuoles but those were more easily found in patients with long term disease. Ten biopsies showed tubular aggregates, specially on the patients with frequent crises or long term disease. A second biopsy was done in three patients and in two we observed a worsening of the histopathologic picture. One patient manifested interictal weakness with evident myopathic changes on the muscle biopsy. Nonspecific changes were found in variable degrees in 15 biopsies. Our study shows that vacuoles and tubular aggregates are frequent changes in periodic paralysis and therefore helpful for the diagnosis. Important myopathic findings in the muscle biopsy suggest a permanent myopathy which probably develops after severe crises or long term disease.


Medical Hypotheses | 2008

Adult hippocampal neurogenesis and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy: Reality or just an attractive history?

Fulvio A. Scorza; Roberta M. Cysneiros; Ricardo Mario Arida; Carla A. Scorza; Antonio-Carlos G. de Almeida; Beny Schmidt; Esper A. Cavalheiro

Neurogenesis persists throughout life in the adult mammalian dentate gyrus and is regulated by several environmental, physiological, and molecular factors. Seizure activity also influences dentate granule cell neurogenesis. In these lines, studies of neurogenesis have demonstrated the presence of hilar-ectopic dentate granule cells after status epilepticus induced experimentally and that these cells are migrate aberrantly, abnormally integrated and hyperexcitable, contributing with this to seizure generation and/or propagation. As we know, epilepsy is the most common serious neurological condition and sudden unexpected death in epilepsy (SUDEP) is the most important direct epilepsy-related cause of death. Information concerning risk factors for SUDEP is conflicting, but high seizure frequency is a potential risk factor. Additionally, potential pathomechanisms for SUDEP are unknown, but it is very probable that cardiac arrhythmias during and between seizures or transmission of epileptic activity to the heart via the autonomic nervous system potentially play a role. Based on these facts, in this paper we postulate that aberrant neurogenesis could influence negatively the cardiovascular system of the patient with epilepsy leading to cardiac abnormalities and hence SUDEP.


Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2006

Frequency of dystrophic muscle abnormalities in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia: analysis of 86 patients

Beatriz Hitomi Kiyomoto; Célia Harumi Tengan; C K Costa; Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Beny Schmidt; Alberto Alain Gabbai

Background: There are few reports describing the coexistence of dystrophic features with those typical of mitochondrial myopathies in muscle biopsy. A recent study suggested that dystrophic features are frequent in patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) with a high mutation load, but the actual frequency of these abnormalities in CPEO remains undetermined. Objective: To review the occurrence of dystrophic abnormalities in a large series of patients with CPEO to assess the frequency of such abnormalities and to verify whether they are correlated with specific mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) mutations. Methods: Retrospective survey of case series (86 patients with CPEO). Results: Only three cases with dystrophic abnormalities were found: two with a large scale mtDNA deletion and one with the A3251G mutation. All three patients showed predominantly proximal muscular weakness resembling limb girdle muscular dystrophy. Conclusions: Dystrophic abnormalities are rare in CPEO and are not correlated with a specific molecular defect.


Arquivos De Neuro-psiquiatria | 1996

Acute necrotizing myopathy and podophyllin toxicity: report of a fatal case

Acary Souza Bulle Oliveira; Leandro Calia; Beatriz Hitomi Kiyomoto; Eliane Focaccia Póvoa; Beny Schmidt; Alberto Alain Gabbai

A 21 year old male ingested podophyllin in a suicide attempt. The disorder was marked by seizures, coma, peripheral neuropathy, renal failure and acute necrotizing myopathy, an unusual finding. The coma and systemic disturbances resolved within three weeks. The myopathy resolved in 7 weeks, demonstrating a high capacity of muscle recuperation. The sensorimotor peripheral neuropathy persisted until the patients death 9 weeks after the ingestion, due to septicemia. This report confirms the transient central neurotoxicity of podophyllin and persistent peripheral neurotoxicity of podophyllin, and describes a reversible necrotizing myopathy associated to mitochondrial abnormalities, a still unreported feature of podophyllin toxicity.

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Alberto Alain Gabbai

Federal University of São Paulo

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Beatriz Hitomi Kiyomoto

Federal University of São Paulo

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Célia Harumi Tengan

Federal University of São Paulo

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José Laredo Filho

Federal University of São Paulo

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Edmar Zanoteli

University of São Paulo

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José Luiz Gomes do Amaral

Federal University of São Paulo

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David Del Curto

Federal University of São Paulo

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